Equity markets: extremely weak month for global stock markets
In the past month, stock markets had declined sharply in all regions. This evolution reinforced existing concerns: higher inflation and higher costs for households and companies, higher interest rates, the war in Ukraine and the energy supply in Europe, the slowdown in growth in China, etc. On the other hand, both in the U.S. and Europe, the publications of company results for the first quarter are considered solid.
European stock markets performed relatively better in local currency than the other regions. The U.S. stock markets, in particular, performed weakly. Both the S&P500 and the Nasdaq fell below their previous lows of mid-March. Companies considered the big winners from the pandemic over the past two years (Amazon, Netflix, etc.) are now in the losing camp. The rise in interest rates also weighed on U.S. stock market indices, including growth companies and technology stocks, more than in other regions. They are more sensitive to higher interest rates because of their valuation. Nevertheless, the stronger dollar still allowed the U.S. stock market to limit the damage to European investors. Value outperformed against growth stocks in that environment, and that trend was more pronounced in the U.S. than in Europe.
Chinese stocks fell sharply in April due to concerns about growth. The Chinese government is still applying a ‘zero covid’ strategy and had to announce new lockdowns in several cities in recent weeks. However, the central bank did announce monetary support measures, which allowed share prices to recover somewhat at the end of the month.
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MSCI EMU NR | -2.0% | -7.7% | -11.0% | -2.3% |
MSCI EUROPE NR | -0.6% | -2.8% | -5.9% | 6.5% |
MSCI USA NR | -4.1% | -3.0% | -7.2% | 11.8% |
MSCI JAPAN NR | -3.8% | -4.7% | -8.2% | -1.2% |
MSCI EM. MARKETS NR | -0.4% | -4.8% | -5.3% | -6.8% |
MSCI AC WORLD NR | -3.0% | -2.7% | -6.1% | 7.9% |